I have a 92 year old mother is living independently. I see her about 3 times per week and occasionally stay over. In the past 3 months she has started sleeping until about 2 pm even if she goes to bed around 10 pm. Is this normal body aging or should I be concerned? She says she enjoys sleeping late.
A heart problem can cause someone to be quite tired as well. Both my father and FIL had heart problems and fell asleep in the chair quite often and also required plenty of rest. If the doctor says her heart is OK; then perhaps it is just the body responding to the aging process - or she could be depressed as this causes great fatigue.
Hope this is just an aging response and nothing more. Take care.
If she really seems cognitive of the day and time and can do her ADL's, then I'd chalk it up to normal aging. Lucky you and very lucky her! But if not, I'd have her evaluated by a gerontologist to see if there could be a dementia happening and medication to slow down the progression of the disease. My mom was in IL @ your mom's age and no real issues but she was in a gerontology group and was on Exelon pill and Remeron. Then @ 94, she started missing putting her "I'm up" door sign on her IL apt door and making it to lunch as she was sleeping past noon, then wandering at night and having significant weight loss and dehydration issues. One thing that did help the last year or so she was in IL was to get torch-style lights and put them on timers in her bedroom and living room so that there would be light up in the rooms on a regular consistent cycle to make her realize it's daytime and you should be up. Table lamps didn't do this, plus she could more easily turn these off. She would nap during the day if need be but the lights reinforced the cycle of day & night. Really I think this kept her from NH for 1 yr.
My mom lived independently until she passed at nearly 93 yrs old. She told us no extraordinary measures, but she did indeed want to continue to live. As with the others this is just to affirm that she slept a lot, but it was more waking early in the morning, then a morning nap, an afternoon nap and then off to bed at night.
She had friends in a healthy bones exercise class that she went to twice a week. She had me and other children and grandchildren, mostly on the phone and her two sisters, on the phone. She read a lot, was cranky at times and happy and kind at other times. I think she was cranky mostly because she was a little scared.
One night she went to bed with an apple and banana at her night stand. When I checked in on her at 9 am she had eaten half the apple and part of the banana, but she had passed away some time early that morning. My cardiologist said dying that way was fast and painless. She lost consciousness and never struggled.
Many people say it was a blessing:
That she lived independently
She was mostly comfortable
Not hospitalized or moved away from her home and things
Lived a long time
Was loved...
Still we all miss her every day. For the time she was here with us, she needed a lot of sleep, starting with one nap and that went on for years, increasing as time went on.
So, I've decided to stop enabling her entropy. I quit as her landscaper and house cleaner, and cut back to three days a week as her cook. I still walk over there 2-3 times a day and I am available, but she needs to get off her butt and do something. She can hire someone or do it herself, but I am no longer going to function as her unpaid lackey. She insisted that she wanted to live independently, so she needs to do it. I was stupid to jump in and help, all she did was lean more and more on me. I personally think that she needs to live in an apartment. She can't manage a house, no matter how small!! ( This is a nice 55+ mobile home park). Poor thing has never been maternal or domestic, so me taking over all the unpleasant details was perfect -- for her. I'll step in before the shower is completely green, but I don't live there. She needs to WAKE UP and DO SOMETHING or she will slide right in to dementia and I'm not capable of fixing that!
honestly, at 92 the shower could turn rainbow colored and i wouldnt care. dont ya think maybe the old gal is tired?
I have dropped my life, moved to a city I don't want to live in, have no support group except for you guys. I can't find a job here to save my life and I'm so depressed that I start each day with self-loathing. I need help, but have no insurance. I haven't been to a doctor in two years. So, capnhardass, you step into my shoes and pull this plow --- I need a freaking break! And THAT'S what I will accomplish. She will either be the person she tells everyone she is (independent) or she will learn to ask for help like everyone else does.